LameXP is an audio encoding and conversion program with a skinnable, drag-and-drop interface. The program can edit metadata, create an automatic playlist file, and modify audio with multi-threaded batch processing tools for normalization and tone adjustment.

The program supports a wide variety of formats and quality settings. Although named for one of its popular encoders (the LAME MP3 encoder), the program can also export to OGG, Opus, FLAC, AC3, APE, WAV and DCA. Can convert from a wide variety of formats including MP3, OGG, FLAC, MP4/AAC, AC3, DTS, WavPack, Musepack, TTA, Speex, Monkey's Audio, Shorten, WMA, Opus and more.

@Special: Those registry keys under "HKEY_USERS/S-1-5-XXX..." store the user-specific configuration. There's one sub-key for each user in "HKEY_USERS". But you normally don't access those keys directly, because *your* key will always be mapped to "HKEY_CURRENT_USER" and that's what applications use to store user-specific settings. So, if at all, you should be getting a "HKEY_CURRENT_USER/Software/Trolltech" a key. But, as said before, I do not have such key here. Maybe, what you have found, was just a leftover from some ancient version.

I suggest you use ProcessMonitor from Microsoft/Sysinternals to see what registry keys LameXP really writes...

webfork, is there a specific testing procedure you are using/recommending here? I'd like to reproduce the result, but I fail. Maybe the person who did the "stealth" test just made a mistake. Or (s)he was testing an old version. Anyway, if nobody can reproduce the result nowadays, I'd advocate for changing the "stealth" status to "yes".

deathcubek: I saw this a bit too late but it looks like someone tested it and found the Trolltech keys. This hadn't been determined as this is a volunteer site and some people are more thorough about stealth testing than others.

Regarding "stealth" status: Registry key "HKCU\Software\Trolltech" sounds like something related to Qt (the company that developed Qt before Digia bought Qt was called Trolltech). Though I cannot reproduce this locally. Key exists, probably because of the Qt installer. But if I delete (rename) said key and then just run the program, the key will not appear again! So how has this been determined?

You've done a good job Mulder. Nice, simple interface, and (but) with the option of the command line flag interface, which is imho highly appreciated by several people (e.g. to get rid of vbr flags in cbr files).Maybe a possibility to make the interface maximized (some like that).And about portability, only the Trolltech ....... is a registry key.Otherwise chapeau!